Saturday, July 28, 2007

"I'm Calling it a Stink - Not an Odor - Because That's What it Is"

Carthage Mayor Jim Woestman was quoted in The Joplin Globe, Thursday, July 26, 2007 as saying "I'm calling it a stink - not an odor - because that's what it is." "Renewable Environmental Solutions has become our problem." Mayor Woestman was in Jefferson City, making a presentation before the Missouri Air Conservation Commission, regarding Renewable Environemntal Solutions LLC (RES). He is making a case for a revising the state's odor dilution standard to 2-to-1 when it is used to measure odors in populated areas. Presently, the dilution standard is 7-to-1. The paper indicates that both The Sierra Club and Jay Nixon, Missouri's Attorney gGneral, both favor this stricter dilution standard.

In Friday, July 27, 2007 The Joplin Globe, reported that Leanne Triplett-Mosby, Missouri Department of Natural Resources (MDNR)-Divison of Environmental Quality, said that MDNR has decided to pay for an independent odor study in Carthage. She said that proposals from potential contractors are to be submitted by Aug. 10. “We want to do this as a pilot project, and control it, because we want to test the technology for our potential use.” Previously, Brian Appel-Prsident of RES had offered to pay for the study. When describing the stink from RES, Mayor Jim Woestman is quoted as saying, "a stink bad enough to make you lose your appetite."

The Carthage Press, Friday, July 27, 2007, reported that three of the seven Commissioners on Missouri's Air Conservation Commission have had exposure to RES's plant. In fact, Mayor Jim Woestman is quoted as saying that several of the Commissioners had "commented on how their clothes stunk" after touring the plant. Woestman is lobbying for a 2-to-1 dilution ratio , or a strict policy in odor violations.

2 Comments:

At July 28, 2007 7:34 PM, Anonymous Anonymous said...

2 to 1 dilution would shut down every business in Missouri that emitted ANY odors, including all restaurants and fast food chains.

Your clothes stink when touring the plant ONLY if you go inside the buildings.

Why is it that no one has smelled anything in the last few months to speak of. And don't tell me you have or you would have the newspapers and TV stations standing at the gates of the plant.

One last thought: gas prices got you down? You all deserve it.

 
At October 25, 2007 11:14 PM, Anonymous Anonymous said...

This whole problem could have been halted long ago. Why wasn't it? Maybe the grant money has something to do with it.

http://www.epa.gov./jtr/jtrnet/orgdp.htm

 

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